JACK KENNY
The New American
Friday, April 13, 2012
Vice President Joe Biden Thursday repeated one of the controversial statements he made in the 2008 campaign. Speaking in Exeter, New Hampshire, Biden said it is patriotic for rich people to pay more in taxes than they do now, and the wealthy know it.
“Wealthy people are just as patriotic as middle-class people, as poor people, and they know they should be doing more,” Biden said. “We’re not supposed to have a system with one set of rules for the wealthy and one set of rules for everyone else.”
Biden ripped probable Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney and Republicans in Congress for opposing Democratic efforts to enact what they call the “Buffett Rule” to increase taxes on those whose income exceeds $1 million a year. The “rule” is named after billionaire investor Warren Buffett, who has publicly stated that his secretary pays more in taxes than he does and that he and others like him should be taxed at a higher rate. Income from capital gains and dividends is taxed at a lower rate than salary or hourly wage income. Romney, a multi-millionaire, acknowledged in January that most of his wealth is from investments, including numerous overseas ventures, and that he pays taxes at a rate of about 15 percent. The top tax rate on earned income is 35 percent. Biden said that instead of the “Buffett Rule,” Republicans want a “Romney Rule” to protect tax cuts for the wealthy.
The Obama administration has been promoting its case for higher taxes on the rich on the White House website, with a calculator that encourages visitors to the site to compare their tax liabilities with those of millionaires. “Guess how many millionaires pay a lower tax rate than you [HINT: It’s at least 5,000] Try our #BuffettRule calculator: wh.gov/buffett-rule,” said a post from the official White House Twitter account.
Biden’s speech in New Hampshire included several references to Romney’s personal wealth, as the Vice President suggested the former Massachusetts Governor is “out of touch” with the concerns of poor and middle-class Americans.
“Governor Romney calls the president out of touch,” Biden said. “Hey, how many of y’all have a Swiss bank account?”
The Romney campaign was quick to respond. An e-mail sent out by the “Romney Press Shop” ridiculed the Vice President’s comments as a repeat of what it called his 2008 “gaffe.” Biden in the campaign of four years ago defended the plank in the Democratic Party platform that called for higher taxes on those making more than $200,000, along with tax cuts for middle- and lower-income families, in order to pay for healthcare and other government programs.
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